Sunday, August 23, 2009

Hongneung and Yureung





Today I struck out for the royal tombs located near the city center and my high school (supposedly). It was my first time navigating the bus system, which is written entirely in hangeul and has no "map." However, the buses are frequent and quite pleasant when you can find the right one.

A number of kings and queens of the old Joseon dynasty are buried at Hongneung and Yureung. Many died tragic deaths, often due to the country's constant struggle for sovereignty with Japan, China, etc. It really is amazing that Korea has endured it all and become such a thriving place (well, the South at least.)


















Some of my favorite stone guards watching over the tombs...

Namyangju City



After arriving at the Incheon airport, my co-teacher drove me through Seoul rush hour traffic to Namyangju-City, which is about 30 minutes northeast of Seoul. My co-teacher said that the Korean government built the city to alleviate overcrowding in Seoul, as with other cities that started booming when the subway system connected them to the capital. He grew up in Seoul himself but said he could no longer afford housing and "bad air." Everywhere you look in Namyangju there are towering apartment buildings--it seems that everything is in a high rise here. There are mostly young families living here, and the population of 450,000 is spread out in different districts.


I've seen several churches already. Some have large red flourescent crosses sticking up--but those may be hospitals...I'll have to figure that one out.



Kimbap Chungguk, which provides most all my meals, has become my new best friend. It's like McDonald's in that it's dirt-cheap and ubiquitous in Korea, but unlike McD's in that the food is actually fresh and delicious. Kimbap, I've learned, means rice wrapped in seaweed (kim=seaweed, bap=rice).






I spy another Kimbap! Do you?




I've visited E-Mart several times. It's like a Walmart, and is always extremely crowded. There is literally a salesperson in every aisle, and others hawking free samples and yelling at customers. It too has many floors, with flat escalators for wheeling carts up and down. You have to lock up your bag before going in, and they even have lockers for dogs! Today I saw a poor little schi tzu in one and was tempted to break it out.



Have you no shame, Pizza Hut?

My digs




Welcome to the ghetto closet I call home! Still waiting to see whether any furnishings are forthcoming...but I've been in the dark for most of this process, so I've grown accustomed to it. I am conveniently located next to a restaurant with a pig and cow holding hands on the front.
It has been beastly hot here, very sultry nights. I will probably need to buy a fan. My bed was quite bigger than the sheets I brought over (bedding is very difficult to find here.) I do smile every morning when I read the Konglish on my faux-Armani mattress.

































As for the bathroom--well, I'll leave that up to your imagination. Let's just say the shower is a hose over the sink. Oh, and did I mention the view...